Emergency Labor Network Crafts Program to Reverse the American Tax Shift

The breakdown on debt limit negotiations between Republicans and Democrats last week was over draconian cuts in the social wage (Social Security, Medicare, education, etcetera) and tax hikes. Both Republicans and Joe Biden, heading the Democrats' team, reportedly agreed on $1 trillion in cuts in social wages, according to the US business press. Where the negotiations broke down was over how much to raise taxes in addition to the trillion-dollar cuts in spending.

Republicans, led by Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Virginia), refused any compromise on taxes, revealing once again that their real objective is to protect and expand the Bush tax cuts no matter what the cost of deficits or debt. The latter, deficits and debt reduction, are apparently just a cover issue to force reductions in social wages - that is, Social Security, Medicare and the like - as a means to continue the tax cuts for corporations and wealthy investors for another decade.

The Biden Democrats' proposals for tax hikes appear focused on tax loopholes more than on restoring top tax rates or reversing the Bush tax cuts, which will cost $270 billion a year for the next decade and doom any possibility of deficit or debt reduction - and require further cuts in Social Security and Medicare-Medicaid down the road.

This writer was recently asked to provide a keynote speech to the important new grouping within the US labor movement called the Emergency Labor Network (ELN). About 130 local union officers, organizers, central labor council and state federation of labor activists gathered last week in Ohio to propose an alternative budget and program for action to both the Republican and Democratic versions. I was asked to suggest an alternative tax program that would make the wealthy and corporations pay and, in the process, not only resolve the deficit but expand social wage benefits such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and jobs.

The program offered and discussed at the ELN conference was dubbed the "RATS Tax Program," an acronym that stands for "Reverse the American Tax Shift" of the past 30 years. The shift has occurred on three levels. For one, in the personal income tax - from the "top 10 percent" wealthy households and investors enjoying capital gains, dividends, carrying interest, and rental income, to the 100 million "bottom 90 percent" households, whose income is almost exclusively "earned" from wages, salaries and pensions. Since 1980, a tax shift in favor of capital incomes benefiting the top 10 percent households - together with a 50 percent decline in tax incomes from the corporate income tax (from about 20 percent to 10 percent of federal tax revenues), and a doubling of payments into the payroll tax (from roughly 20 percent to 40 percent of federal tax revenues) - has resulted in a total annual shift in income by 2011 approaching $1 trillion a year. In other words, a "Great American Tax Shift."

The RATS Tax Program is the response to this shift. And, as the attendees at the conference put it in terms of a slogan: "I don't give a RATS Tax About the Rich!" The ten points the RATS tax program adopted by the conference are as follows:

Restore the capital gains and dividends tax rates, from their current 15 percent to their levels of 70 percent in 1980.

Restore the top income bracket personal income tax rate to the 70 percent from 1980.

End tax loopholes for corporations and millionaires.

Lift the annual income cap on the Social Security payroll tax for all earned income (wages and salaries) above its current $106,800 ceiling. Extend the 12.4 percent payroll tax to all capital incomes over $100,000 per year. (Note: per the Social Security Trustees, this would provide 150 percent of what is needed to resolve all funding issues for Social Security retirement and disability benefits.)

Increase the Medicare payroll tax by 0.25 percent, from its current 1.45 percent, for both employees and employers over the next ten years. Add a second 0.25 percent for each in 2022. (Note: per the Social Security trustees, this would resolve all funding problems for Medicare.)

End multinational corporations' offshore tax fraud. Make multinational corporations bring back their $1 trillion current cash hoard in their offshore subsidiaries and pay their 35 percent tax. If they refuse, place a 50 percent tariff on all their imported goods to the United States.

Repatriate wealthy investors' $4 trillion illegally sheltered hoard now in 27 offshore tax havens identified by the IRS and pay their legally required taxes. If they refuse to repatriate within 90 days, impose 10 percent penalties for consecutive 90 days. If the 27 countries' tax havens refuse to cooperate in the repatriation, freeze their assets in the US until they comply.

Stop the states' corporate tax cut competition and tax revenue "race to the bottom." Introduce a federal "State Corporate Relocation Equalization" tax to even out state-to-state corporate tax differentials. Use the federal revenue from the equalization for state job training.

Tax the banksters (commercial and noncommercial banks). Levy a three-part financial transactions tax as follows: 1. A tax of 10 cents on all common stock trades. 2. A tax of $1 per $1,000 value for all corporate bond sales. 3. A tax of 5 cents per dollar value on all forms of derivatives trading and swaps by counterparties.

Jack Rasmus is the author of Obama's Economy: Recovery for the Few, 2012, Palgrave and Pluto Press. His web site is: www.kyklosproductions.com. Rasmus blogs at jackrasmus.com. Follow him on Twitter at #drjackrasmus.

Emergency Labor Network Crafts Program to Reverse the American Tax Shift

The breakdown on debt limit negotiations between Republicans and Democrats last week was over draconian cuts in the social wage (Social Security, Medicare, education, etcetera) and tax hikes. Both Republicans and Joe Biden, heading the Democrats' team, reportedly agreed on $1 trillion in cuts in social wages, according to the US business press. Where the negotiations broke down was over how much to raise taxes in addition to the trillion-dollar cuts in spending.

Republicans, led by Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Virginia), refused any compromise on taxes, revealing once again that their real objective is to protect and expand the Bush tax cuts no matter what the cost of deficits or debt. The latter, deficits and debt reduction, are apparently just a cover issue to force reductions in social wages - that is, Social Security, Medicare and the like - as a means to continue the tax cuts for corporations and wealthy investors for another decade.

The Biden Democrats' proposals for tax hikes appear focused on tax loopholes more than on restoring top tax rates or reversing the Bush tax cuts, which will cost $270 billion a year for the next decade and doom any possibility of deficit or debt reduction - and require further cuts in Social Security and Medicare-Medicaid down the road.

This writer was recently asked to provide a keynote speech to the important new grouping within the US labor movement called the Emergency Labor Network (ELN). About 130 local union officers, organizers, central labor council and state federation of labor activists gathered last week in Ohio to propose an alternative budget and program for action to both the Republican and Democratic versions. I was asked to suggest an alternative tax program that would make the wealthy and corporations pay and, in the process, not only resolve the deficit but expand social wage benefits such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and jobs.

The program offered and discussed at the ELN conference was dubbed the "RATS Tax Program," an acronym that stands for "Reverse the American Tax Shift" of the past 30 years. The shift has occurred on three levels. For one, in the personal income tax - from the "top 10 percent" wealthy households and investors enjoying capital gains, dividends, carrying interest, and rental income, to the 100 million "bottom 90 percent" households, whose income is almost exclusively "earned" from wages, salaries and pensions. Since 1980, a tax shift in favor of capital incomes benefiting the top 10 percent households - together with a 50 percent decline in tax incomes from the corporate income tax (from about 20 percent to 10 percent of federal tax revenues), and a doubling of payments into the payroll tax (from roughly 20 percent to 40 percent of federal tax revenues) - has resulted in a total annual shift in income by 2011 approaching $1 trillion a year. In other words, a "Great American Tax Shift."

The RATS Tax Program is the response to this shift. And, as the attendees at the conference put it in terms of a slogan: "I don't give a RATS Tax About the Rich!" The ten points the RATS tax program adopted by the conference are as follows:

Restore the capital gains and dividends tax rates, from their current 15 percent to their levels of 70 percent in 1980.

Restore the top income bracket personal income tax rate to the 70 percent from 1980.

End tax loopholes for corporations and millionaires.

Lift the annual income cap on the Social Security payroll tax for all earned income (wages and salaries) above its current $106,800 ceiling. Extend the 12.4 percent payroll tax to all capital incomes over $100,000 per year. (Note: per the Social Security Trustees, this would provide 150 percent of what is needed to resolve all funding issues for Social Security retirement and disability benefits.)

Increase the Medicare payroll tax by 0.25 percent, from its current 1.45 percent, for both employees and employers over the next ten years. Add a second 0.25 percent for each in 2022. (Note: per the Social Security trustees, this would resolve all funding problems for Medicare.)

End multinational corporations' offshore tax fraud. Make multinational corporations bring back their $1 trillion current cash hoard in their offshore subsidiaries and pay their 35 percent tax. If they refuse, place a 50 percent tariff on all their imported goods to the United States.

Repatriate wealthy investors' $4 trillion illegally sheltered hoard now in 27 offshore tax havens identified by the IRS and pay their legally required taxes. If they refuse to repatriate within 90 days, impose 10 percent penalties for consecutive 90 days. If the 27 countries' tax havens refuse to cooperate in the repatriation, freeze their assets in the US until they comply.

Stop the states' corporate tax cut competition and tax revenue "race to the bottom." Introduce a federal "State Corporate Relocation Equalization" tax to even out state-to-state corporate tax differentials. Use the federal revenue from the equalization for state job training.

Tax the banksters (commercial and noncommercial banks). Levy a three-part financial transactions tax as follows: 1. A tax of 10 cents on all common stock trades. 2. A tax of $1 per $1,000 value for all corporate bond sales. 3. A tax of 5 cents per dollar value on all forms of derivatives trading and swaps by counterparties.

Jack Rasmus is the author of Obama's Economy: Recovery for the Few, 2012, Palgrave and Pluto Press. His web site is: www.kyklosproductions.com. Rasmus blogs at jackrasmus.com. Follow him on Twitter at #drjackrasmus.